Washington, D.C.
Elms of the National Mallhistory (Botanic Garden “Elm”) continued
![]() Courtesy Library of Congress By the time the McMillan Commission's plan was being developed, the Botanic Garden grounds had fallen into a severe state of disrepair due inadequate funding and maintenance. The McMillan Commission determined that the Botanic Garden grounds would become the site of Union Square, a monument to Federal victory in the Civil War. The centerpiece of the square’s design, the enormous equestrian statue of General (later President) Ulysses S. Grant, was installed in 1922 and the statue of Major General George Gordon Meade, the victor of the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg, followed in 1927. The unkempt and overgrown Botanic Garden seemed unsightly next to the massive new monuments. Subsequently, in 1930, the structures and plantings were demolished and removed in 1930 and Union Square was re-landscaped. |
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